Hewlett Packard Enterprise Prepares for More Layoffs

Last week, it was HP Inc. This week, it’s Hewlett Packard Enterprise that’s laying off more people.

The company, which spun out of Hewlett Packard hpq last year, is laying off personnel, according to social media posts on Twitter and the Layoff.com on Monday. An HPE spokeswoman confirmed to GeekWire—first to report the news—that previously announced job cuts were happening. Fortune reached out to HPE for additional comment.

The news bubbled up the day before HPE hpe kicks off its annual security analyst meeting in San Francisco, where chief executive Meg Whitman will lay out her strategy for the company that sells servers, storage, and cloud computing software.

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Layoffs are nothing new to either of the HP entities or to their predecessor, the iconic 77-year old company that has struggled for traction as more businesses turn to cloud computing for more of their work. That shift has hurt sales of servers, storage, and networking hardware sold for corporate data centers. The same trend has battered competitors from Ciscocsco to IBMibm.

Businesses that used to upgrade their own data center hardware every few years are increasingly using public cloud services from Amazon Web Services amzn or Microsoft Azure msft to augment or even replace their own data centers.

For more on HP, watch:

Insult to injury, those big cloud providers typically design their own hardware and have it built instead of buying branded gear off the shelf. That’s not good news for the HPEs and Ciscos of the world.

Last week, it was HP Inc. This week, it’s Hewlett Packard Enterprise that’s laying off more people.

The company, which spun out of Hewlett Packard hpq last year, is laying off personnel, according to social media posts on Twitter and the Layoff.com on Monday. An HPE spokeswoman confirmed to GeekWire—first to report the news—that previously announced job cuts were happening. Fortune reached out to HPE for additional comment.

The news bubbled up the day before HPE hpe kicks off its annual security analyst meeting in San Francisco, where chief executive Meg Whitman will lay out her strategy for the company that sells servers, storage, and cloud computing software.

Get Data Sheet, Fortune’s daily newsletter on the business of technology.

Layoffs are nothing new to either of the HP entities or to their predecessor, the iconic 77-year old company that has struggled for traction as more businesses turn to cloud computing for more of their work. That shift has hurt sales of servers, storage, and networking hardware sold for corporate data centers. The same trend has battered competitors from Ciscocsco to IBMibm.

Businesses that used to upgrade their own data center hardware every few years are increasingly using public cloud services from Amazon Web Services amzn or Microsoft Azure msft to augment or even replace their own data centers.

For more on HP, watch:

Insult to injury, those big cloud providers typically design their own hardware and have it built instead of buying branded gear off the shelf. That’s not good news for the HPEs and Ciscos of the world.